Texas high school football season is upon
us. And for reasons I can’t adequately explain, I’ll once more write weekly
game stories about the fortunes of the 2018 Southlake Carroll Dragons.
Practice begins in two weeks, and the
Dragons scrimmage Arlington High on Aug. 25. They open the season against South
Grand Prairie in Warrior-Gopher Stadium on Aug. 30.
So the end of summer is nigh, and it’s
time to shake off the cobwebs and to check in on Carroll's latest gridiron stalwarts and their new coach, Riley Dodge. What will Dodge Ball 2.0 bring us all?
To be honest, I had some reservations
about continuing my game accounts. After all, I’ve never made any effort to gather
an audience for Dragon Tales, and my readership is so small that I could probably
accomplish the same result with a couple of phone calls.
And although I enjoy the games and like
the challenge of capturing their flavor and content, the writing and analysis
does take a sizeable chunk out of my weekends.
Ultimately, I decided to give it another go.
I’m fascinated at the prospects of the legendary Todd Dodge’s son taking over
the team and the resulting excitement it has generated throughout Dragon
Nation. But I’m motivated by something else that I have always had trouble
explaining to my friends and family.
I’ve been following Dragon football ever
since my daughter started high school. I had attended a few Southlake playoff
games over the years, but I didn’t become a Dragon fanatic until Rachel started
playing clarinet in the Dragon Marching Band.
That was back in 2006, and the Dragons
were at the tail end of their legendary Run, when they traveled to five
straight state championship games and came within a single point of winning
them all. As it was, they had to settle for only four out of five, a record
that perhaps will never be repeated.
Marice and I followed Rachel and the
Dragons that entire season, missing only a frigid, wind-swept playoff game
against Odessa Permian in Texas Tech’s Jones Stadium. Southlake won that one,
and every game that season, including the championship game against Austin
Westlake in San Antonio’s Alamodome.
It wouldn’t win another state football
title for five long years, but I was hooked on the Dragons. I’ve missed only a
handful of games since then, but I’ve had my butt in my pricey season green
seat for every single home game.
I know. It’s a sickness.
My passion for high school football in
general and Carroll Dragon football in particular didn’t come naturally. My
friends who are aware of my obsession are surprised to learn I never played the
game. To my lingering shame and dismay, my mother deemed the sport too
dangerous and forbid me from playing.
I meekly submitted to her wishes, an act
of cowardice I wish I could take back. I seriously think my reluctance to
challenge her decision is the reason I’m such a contrarian today, suspicious
and wary of authority in any form. I resist as much out of reflex as I do
conviction. I’m still trying to prove to myself that I’m not a milquetoast who
shrinks from conflict and kowtows to brute force.
When it came time for my son to play
sports, he seized on football early. He loved flag football, and when he got
old enough, he told me he wanted to put on pads and play tackle.
“I’m ready to hit somebody,” he said,
secretly delighting me.
And he played with joy and ferocity,
suffering his share of nicks and bruises and more serious injuries, including a
broken wrist and, alarmingly, a concussion in his first 8th grade game.
He played another year after he recovered
from that injury, but at the end of his freshman year he told me he wanted to
hang up his cleats.
“You told me,” he said solemnly, “that I
was playing for me, not for you, and that when I wanted to quit, I could. It’s
time.”
As I looked at him with a complicated mix
of pride and regret, I felt the hot sting of tears.
Sadly, I reflected that I would never
labor on game nights with the other football dads to erect the huge, inflatable
football helmet that Dragon players run through before opening kickoffs, a desire
I had harbored in secret since the first Carroll game I ever attended.
Instead, I would have to be content to be
a Dragon fan, to sit in the stands and cheer on other dads’ sons as they
participated in the grand, colorful, exhilarating tradition of Friday Night
Lights.
So if I’m completely honest, I guess my
affection for high school football is in some measure a pathetic attempt to recapture
an experience I missed both as a youngster and as a father. That makes me a
sad-freaking-sack, doesn’t it?
Of course, there’s more to it than that. I
love the pageantry and hoopla of the whole affair – the marching bands, the
drill squads, the pyramids of cheerleaders, the parade of flags carried across
the field after every score.
And I love the purity of high school
athletics. In this era of scandal-plagued college programs and the ego- and
money-driven excesses of pro football, high school programs have largely
escaped unscathed, at least so far.
It’s true that there are haves and
have-nots in high school programs. Full disclosure, Southlake Carroll is
definitely in the have category. Its well-heeled parents guarantee it. But
money hasn’t corrupted the system at the high school level in the way it has in
college and the pros.
A few of the best players on the field
will go on to play college football at some level. But most will not. They are
not playing for college scholarships or for the dream of an NFL contract. They
play because they love the game, the comradeship, the teamwork, the satisfying
rush of being involved in a desperate struggle with your brothers in arms.
School spirit, a laughable concept anywhere else, has real meaning on the turf
of a high school football stadium.
If you doubt it, just sit down and talk to
a high school athlete. Have a real conversation and ask him or her what
motivates them, what sends the football kids to the practice field in the
second week of the hottest month in Texas? Why do they devoutly hope – as
Dragon players do – that they’ll be compelled to leave their families’ holiday
celebrations to attend Thanksgiving Day practices? Because that means they and
their comrades are still in playoffs and still in the hunt for a state title.
These are great kids, the last best hope
for this sad, battered country of ours. And I feel honored to tell their
stories and record both their triumphs and their heartbreaks, even if it is for
no pay in service to an audience so tiny it could fit in a good-sized phone
booth.
You may see some changes in format this
year. They’re intended to increase readability and to encourage brevity over tiresome
bloviation, which I have elevated of late into a fine art.
Do you hear that? It’s high school football’s
siren call. Go Dragons!
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